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Oral Immunotherapy for Food Protein Induced Enterocolitis Syndrome (DOPAxSEA)

I

Institute of Hospitalization and Scientific Care (IRCCS)

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

FPIES

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Culprit food elimination diet
Procedure: Oral immunotherapy (OIT)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Food Protein Induced Enterocolitis Syndrome (FPIES) is a food allergy characterized by clinical manifestations of varying severity that can be, very rarely, severe to the point of leading to shock. Acute FPIES is nowaday the most common presentation of the disease. It is characterized by repeated, projectile vomiting (usually arising between 1 and 4 hours after ingestion of the culprit food) accompanied by pallor, hypotonia, and lethargy, with complete resolution of the aforementioned symptoms almost always within a few hours. Dietary management of FPIES currently involves avoiding allergens, offering complementary foods to encourage normal growth and providing families with individualized feeding plans. The elimination diet does not promote healing, it only prevents adverse reactions from culprit food ingestion. Recovery (i.e. tolerance to the culprit food) is achieved spontaneously over time. However, for some children, tolerance does not occur. These patients suffer from persistent FPIES. For these patients oral immunotherapy (OIT) is not yet planned and randomized and controlled studies are needed to demonstrate its efficacy and safety. The primary objective of the study will be to verify, with a multicenter, prospective, randomized study, stratified for the main 4 offending foods in Italy (cows milk, hens egg, fish and cereals), open-label and with an adequate sample size, the efficacy and safety of an OIT procedure in children affected by acute persistent FPIES. The comparison will be made between a population of children affected by acute persistent FPIES subjected to OIT for the offending food (DOPA group) and a population of children affected by acute persistent FPIES subjected to the traditional measure, i.e. the elimination diet for the offending food (Diet group).

Efficacy will be measured through:

  • Comparison of the percentages of children who have increased their reactivity threshold even to the point of no adverse reactions to the offending food following the intake of a normal dose for their age in the two populations during treatment;
  • Comparison of the percentages of children who have reached tolerance towards the culprit food in the two populations;

Safety will be measured through:

  • Comparison of the percentages of children who have presented adverse reactions following the ingestion (accidental in the Diet group and expected in the DOPA group) of the culprit food after enrollment in the study.

The definitions of desensitization and tolerance are taken from the EAACI 2018 guidelines on immunotherapy for IgE-mediated AA. In particular, desensitization corresponds to the absence of adverse reactions following the ingestion of the culprit food (in quantities up to a normal dose for age) during oral immunotherapy. This is a reversible or partially reversible clinical response that depends on continued exposure to the allergen. If the administration of the allergen is interrupted, the previous level of clinical reactivity may return. Tolerance corresponds to the absence of adverse reactions following the ingestion of the culprit food despite a period of absence of exposure.

Enrollment

168 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

3 to 17 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria

  • Pediatric patients (under 18 years of age) affected by persistent acute food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome.
  • The last anamnestic acute episode must not be more than 1 month prior to the date of inclusion in the study. The anamnestic definition of acute episode will be based on the use of Miceli Sopo 2022 questionnaire for food protein-induced enterocolitis syndrome. In case it is not clear whether the disease is active or not, an oral food challenge will be performed to verify the possible acquisition of tolerance (a procedure that is part of the routine management for this allergy). Inclusion in the study must occur within 1 month of the possible failure of the aforementioned oral food challenge. Regarding patients with multiple FPIES (expected to be approximately 6% of the total patients included, a small minority), OIT will be started for the nutritionally most relevant food among those eligible.

Exclusion criteria

  • Absence of inclusion criteria.
  • Transition from acute FPIES to IgE-mediated AA.
  • Absence of informed consent approval by their caregivers.
  • Failure to use email by their caregivers.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

168 participants in 2 patient groups

DOPA group
Experimental group
Description:
Children affected by acute persistent FPIES subjected to OIT for the offending food
Treatment:
Procedure: Oral immunotherapy (OIT)
Diet group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Children affected by acute persistent FPIES subjected to the traditional measure, i.e. the elimination diet for the offending food
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Culprit food elimination diet

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Stefano Miceli Sopo

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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